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2024 – Olav Sorenson https://www.olavsorenson.net Research and teaching Tue, 30 Apr 2024 19:54:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 The New Argonauts: The International Migration of Venture-Backed Companies https://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=657 Sat, 24 Feb 2024 16:00:28 +0000 https://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=657 Yuan Shi, Olav Sorenson, and David M. Waguespack

We use a novel longitudinal dataset, constructed from 16 downloads of VentureXpert records collected over 20 years, to characterize the international migration of venture-capital-backed startups. We find that: (i) 1078 firms in our sample (1.4%) migrate; (ii) countries with high levels of in-migration also have high levels of out-migration; (iii) migrating firms move to places with more investors; (iv) pre-move investors and their connections most strongly predict migration patterns; and (v) movers raise more money than non-movers, primarily from investors at their destinations. Overall, these patterns appear inconsistent with those expected if startups move primarily in search of talent or customers. Instead, the flows across countries look more like international trade, with startups seeking capital, and social connections between investors defining the shipping lanes.

Strategic Management Journal, in press (OPEN ACCESS)

Summarized in the UCLA Anderson Review

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The shape and structure of entrepreneurial and innovative places https://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=630 Sat, 24 Feb 2024 15:56:25 +0000 https://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=630 Geoffrey Borchhardt and Olav Sorenson

Interactions primarily occur between those living and working in close proximity to one another. This essay explores some consequences of that fact for places. It offers three principle propositions: (1) Compact buildings, neighborhoods, and cities, and denser places, should promote higher rates of entrepreneurship, innovation, and economic growth because they reduce the costs of interaction. (2) More integrated places should also promote entrepreneurship and innovation because the average person in those places interacts with a more diverse set of others. (3) In more segregated and unevenly distributed places, people diverge more, as a function of where within the place they live and work, in their propensities to innovate and to found firms.

Published in Entrepreneurial Ecosystems in Cities & Regions

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